- RX2 championship leader extends his advantage with Canadian success
- Stars of tomorrow put on a spectacular show in celebrated event’s 50th year
- Hard-fought podium finishes for Guillaume De Ridder and Tanner Whitten
Two years on from his debut in the FIA World Rallycross Championship feeder series, Cyril Raymond returned to the Grand Prix de Trois-Rivières in Canada this weekend (5/6 August) and delivered a masterclass to close in on the coveted crown in the RX2 International Series presented by Cooper Tires. Throughout the qualifying and semi-final stages, the scene looked set for a battle royale between Raymond and his chief title rival Dan Rooke, but the Englishman found himself out-of-luck in the all-important final, as a first corner error dropped him to fourth and a subsequent three-way collision saw his challenge end in the wall. At the time of his retirement, however, Rooke was already trailing Guillaume De Ridder and Tanner Whitten, who duly completed the podium positions behind Raymond – the Belgian in particular proving to be one of the stars of the weekend, winning three of his four qualifying races as he continues to prove his prowess in the burgeoning discipline. Qualifying Races The qualifying races saw mixed conditions, with heavy rain at times making for a distinctly treacherous track surface. Raymond and Rooke shared the fastest times to jointly top the table after Q4, painting the prospect of a tantalising duel ahead between the two championship protagonists. Raymond’s Olsbergs MSE team-mate Whitten was a consistent contender in third, with Vasiliy Gryazin enjoying his best RX2 event to-date in fourth, as the Russian produced an impressive turn-of-speed on Canadian soil. After shining in both the wet and the dry, De Ridder should have been inside the top three, but an engine issue at the start of Q4 dropped him to fifth in the intermediate standings – just ahead of his JC Raceteknik stablemates Sondre Evjen and William Nilsson in sixth and seventh respectively. Simon Olofsson overcame a series of scares and close calls throughout the qualifying stages to snare eighth place, with Andreas Bäckman in ninth and Sandra Hultgren and Jessica Bäckman both making it into the semi-finals for the first time this year in tenth and 11th. Series newcomer Cole Keatts rounded out the top 12 on his RX2 debut, although there were hard luck stories for Norwegian trio Glenn Haug, Simon Syversen and Thomas Holmen, with the latter encountering all manner of mechanical maladies before posting the third-quickest time in Q4 to demonstrate what might have been. Semi-Finals From pole position in the first semi-final, Raymond got the jump at the start over Whitten, but a challenge from De Ridder backfired as the Belgian locked up and overshot the first corner, slipping to sixth in the process – although he rapidly regained fifth from JC Raceteknik team-mate Nilsson. With Raymond and Whitten holding station throughout, attentions switched to the developing tussle for third between Andreas Bäckman and the recovering De Ridder, who dived to the inside on the last lap, with contact pitching the Swede into the barriers. Jessica Bäckman completed her first RX2 semi-final in fourth place, with Nilsson fifth. Rooke led Gryazin away from the lights in semi-final two, with the fast-starting Olofsson leaping immediately up to third, as Evjen and Hultgren played early jokers. The leading trio pulled away from the pursuing pack, with Rooke inching clear and Olofsson pressurising Gryazin for second until the Swede found himself falling back slightly in the closing stages with brake issues. Rooke motored on to win and book his place in the final for the fifth consecutive event, with Gryazin joining the Englishman for the first time in second and Olofsson narrowly staving off Evjen for third. Final With the two title protagonists sharing the front row of the grid for the final, tensions were high – and when the lights went out, Raymond and Rooke made almost identical getaways. Something had to give, and as the Frenchman hugged the inside line, it was his British rival who lost out on the exit as he slipped behind De Ridder and Whitten. The reigning MSA British Rallycross Champion took the opportunity to joker on the first lap, but De Ridder and Whitten had enough pace to stay ahead after their own jokers later on – which is where things really heated up. With Raymond cruising on to victory, the De Ridder-Whitten-Rooke scrap came upon Gryazin, who was yet to joker and struggling with engine issues. As De Ridder found himself momentarily baulked, both Whitten and Rooke scented an opportunity to pounce, and it was the Englishman that came off worse as an ambitious move on the outside line ended in the concrete wall. He was attempting to rejoin when he was hit by an unsighted Olofsson, bringing his race to a premature conclusion. All of that was of little concern to Raymond, who swept serenely to his fourth triumph from five outings in 2017 by a margin of almost seven seconds, seeing the Frenchman extend his championship lead over Rooke to 14 points heading next to his home round at Lohéac on 1-3 September. De Ridder replicated his breakthrough Swedish result in second, with Whitten returning to the podium in third. Gryazin took fourth ahead of the delayed Olofsson. Quote, Unquote Cyril Raymond (1st): “This is a great result going into my home event in France, and to be up on the podium with two friends – one of whom I’ve known since my karting days and the other being my team-mate – made it even better. Big thanks to Olsbergs MSE for an amazing effort once again. The conditions yesterday were a real challenge, particularly in Q2; there was so much standing water, and I was aquaplaning on the straight, so that was very tricky but we made the best of it. We had some good battles during the qualifying races, and I was very impressed by the speed Dan showed for his first time here – he certainly put me under pressure over the weekend. It’s obviously good to have increased our margin in the championship, but we have to keep pushing because Dan is not going to give up and he will come back even stronger. We can’t afford to relax or take our foot off the gas for a moment.” Guillaume De Ridder (2nd): “This was my first time competing outside of Europe, and what an experience! We were quick all weekend, but we didn’t have much luck in either Q2 or Q4 with the rain and then the engine problem. That said, I won three of my four qualifying races which put us in a good position, but I had to really give my all in the semi-final after my first corner error. I made a much better start in the final, although a few early mistakes allowed Cyril to get away. After that, my main focus was on holding Tanner and Dan off behind. It was a fun battle between the three of us, but it got a bit crazy when we all caught Gryazin in precisely the wrong place on the track! I found myself blocked in behind him, with Tanner going one side of me and Dan the other, but fortunately I came out ahead and it’s fantastic to take another second-place finish. Hopefully next time we can go one step better!” Tanner Whitten (3rd): “It’s great to be back on the podium after our disappointing weekend in Sweden last time out, and important from my point-of-view to prove we have the speed to run consistently up at the front in RX2. This was a really big weekend for me. It’s the only race we have in North America, and I kind of consider it my home event – it’s the first and perhaps the only one my family and sponsors can make it to. Saturday didn’t really go to plan, but second place in Q4 vaulted us up the order and put us in contention for a strong result. I must say that Cooper Tires have produced incredible tyres for us to race on in all conditions, which really showed this weekend. The semi-final was fairly straightforward, but then in the final, I didn’t get the best of starts, which left me playing catch-up from the get-go and we had a good battle with Guillaume and Dan. Now we need a big push to collect as many points as possible before the end of the season.” Andreas Eriksson, RX2 International Series presented by Cooper Tires CEO: “For many of our RX2 competitors, this was their first experience of racing outside Europe, but such is the calibre in the championship that you would have been hard-pressed to tell. The qualifying stages really tested them with changeable and challenging weather conditions, but our stars of the future demonstrated their talent and versatility by adapting to whatever the weather threw at them and the result was some spectacular racing. Congratulations to Cyril for his fourth win of what has been a very impressive season, and also to Guillaume and Tanner, who are proving themselves to be regular podium contenders. Next up, we go to Cyril’s home turf in France – so the interest in RX2 is sure to be higher than ever!” Final Result 1. Cyril RAYMOND (FRA) Olsbergs MSE 6 laps 2. Guillaume DE RIDDER (BEL) JC Raceteknik +6.859s 3. Tanner WHITTEN (USA) Olsbergs MSE +8.619s 4. Vasiliy GRYAZIN (LVA) Sports Racing Technologies +18.609s 5. Simon OLOFSSON (SWE) Simon Olofsson +21.517s 6. Dan ROOKE (GBR) Team Färén + 3 laps Championship Standings 1. Cyril Raymond (FRA) 138 points 2. Dan Rooke (GBR) 124 points 3. Guillaume De Ridder (BEL) 89 points 4. Tanner Whitten (USA) 83 points 5. William Nilsson (SWE) 75 points 6. Simon Olofsson (SWE) 72 points 7. Glenn Haug (NOR) 63 points 8. Sondre Evjen (NOR) 59 points 9. Vasiliy Gryazin (LVA) 51 points 10. Andreas Bäckman (SWE) 49 pointsImage CaptionsAbove: Cyril Raymond celebrated his fourth triumph from five starts in 2017 in Canada Below top left: Tanner Whitten returned to the rostrum with a solid and consistent performance at Trois-Rivières Below top right: Raymond expertly mastered all conditions en route to victory Below second row: Happy faces all round on the RX2 podium Below third left: Jessica Bäckman made the semi-final stage for the first time in RX2 Below third right: Guillaume De Ridder replicated his Swedish success with a superb second-place finish Below fourth row: The moment Dan Rooke's challenge began to unravel in the final Below fifth left: Sixteen-year-old Cole Keatts produced a maturely impressive performance on his RX2 debut Below fifth right: Simon Olofsson was fast but wild on his way to the final for the first time since Lydden Hill Below bottom: Raymond led as his rivals soaked up the spray in his wake |
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